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Starting Pitcher Fantasy Baseball Breakouts or Fake Outs? (Week 2)

Parker Messick - Fantasy Baseball Rankings, MLB Draft Sleepers, Waiver Wire Pickups

Dan analyzes advanced pitcher statistics to see who is surging for fantasy baseball this season. Are these pitchers breakouts or fake outs? Read his fantasy baseball outlooks for Parker Messick, Casey Mize, and Kyle Harrison.

Baseball is back, and I am so ready to overreact to one really good start from starting pitchers! Psych! Do people still say that?

If you followed this column at all last season, you'll remember that the goal is to take a look at several pitchers every week who are showing signs of "breaking out." That term gets thrown a lot in our industry, but for me, it simply means they're flirting with the possibility of improving their baseline performance over a larger sample size.

So while we typically look at younger pitchers as potential "breakouts," I won't limit myself to only youngsters. The concept of the breakout can be applied to pitchers of all experience levels, as we have seen numerous examples of pitchers improving in a big way from season to season, even into their thirties. For Week One, I went with four relatively young, emerging arms who are all relatively lightly rostered in standard-sized fantasy baseball leagues. All rostership percentages are courtesy of Yahoo!

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Casey Mize, Detroit Tigers

  • 31% Rostered
  • 2025 Stats: 14 W, 149 IP, 3.87 ERA, 1.27 WHIP
  • First Start of 2026: 6 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 2 BB, 9 K

Mize turned in a top-notch start against the Diamondbacks to kick off his 2026 campaign in style. Last season, he emerged as a post-hype breakout of sorts as he posted the best numbers of his career at age 28. He provided managers with some decent ratios and 14 wins, but was only an average strikeout arm as he failed to strike out more than a batter per inning (139 strikeouts in 149 innings).

That 22.2% K% was right around the league average, but Mize's low walk rate of 5.7% allowed him to post a respectable 16.4% K-BB%. He was...a solid, useful pitcher, but certainly nothing all that splashy last season.

So a 41% K% in his debut certainly raises some eyebrows. So what was different, if anything, in his approach?

Well, the biggest difference is that he went very splitter-heavy in his approach, throwing it nearly as often as his fastball. While his splitter is his best swing-and-miss pitch, it's often a tough pitch to rely on as such a big piece of your arsenal because you're often relying on getting hitters to chase it down and out of the zone.

Even the best splitter guys (like Kevin Gausman) can run hot, incredibly hot, and cold from start to start (Gausman is HOT to start this year) based on how well they are locating the pitch.

Mize had a massive 52.9% whiff rate on the splitter against the Snakes in this start, and the pitch had an absurd 46.2% putaway%. Compare those numbers to 33% whiff% and 22% putaway on the splitter in 2025, and it's pretty easy to see that the splitter was in top form in this start. But can he replicate that success, or is this a bit of an outlier result?

The rest of his arsenal is pretty ho-hum, but as my friend Corbin Young pointed out, his slurve did show improved movement - both horizontally and vertically. I am a little more interested in how he develops that pitch than the splitter, as it would give him another out pitch if he can locate it where he wants with consistency.

And to throw a little cold water on the whole thing, Mize had an xERA of 5.04 in this game with a Stuff+ of just 91 and Pitching+ of 88. He gave up a home run and was able to escape a few jams with runners on base with those strikeouts. I am not sure his O-Swing% of 42.6% is sustainable, when he posted just a 28.9% rate last season.

Verdict: It's a great start from Mize, who is capable of big outings when he has the good splitter. I am not ready to proclaim him a breakout by any means just yet. He needs to show us that he's capable of these types of strikeout performances more often and that he's not entirely reliant on the splitter for his success.

 

Kyle Harrison, Milwaukee Brewers

  • 30% Rostered
  • 2025 Stats: 1 W, 35.2 IP, 4.04 ERA, 1.37 WHIP
  • First Start of 2026: 5 IP, 4 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 8 K

Okay, I know very well that there are some Kyle Harrison truthers out there. I wouldn't classify myself as one of them; however, I have always been intrigued by his talent and believed that he is an MLB-quality arm.

The former Giants prospect was sent to Boston last year in the Rafael Devers trade, but then flipped again to the Brewers this spring. Now that he's in Milwaukee, can the Brewers unlock his full potential as we have seen them do with so many other pitchers in the past?

There's certainly a lot to like about what he did in his first start. He whiffed eight Rays, which was good for a 40% K% while showing some really good control (just one walk and a spectacular 26% Ball%). That's a pretty big improvement in the control department, as he's been an 8-9% walk rate guy in the first three years of his career.

Harrison had a strong 16.1% SwStr% in his debut, getting whiffs both inside the zone (77.4% Z-Contact%) and getting a lot of chases outside of the zone (50% O-Swing%), mainly with his changeup. That's the pitch that really stands out here to me when we compare his results to last season.

The changeup had improved vertical movement, dropping 40.8 inches - nearly five inches more than he averaged on the pitch last season. He already has a plus fastball that sits 95 mph, so pairing that with a potentially elite changeup could be huge and has been a recipe that has worked for many dominant lefties in the past.

Harrison's stuff has traditionally graded out pretty well in the past, but a 110 grade from this start is still impressive. What's more impressive is a 122 Pitching+ grade, which reflects just how well Harrison commanded all of his pitches.

If you rain on his parade just a little, you can point to a 100% strand rate and mention that he allowed a home run. However, it was a solo shot, which we can live with, and the fact that he allowed only five baserunners total is a great sign going forward for a guy who has a career WHIP of 1.31.

Verdict: All of the underlying numbers check out on Harrison, but it's still just one start, so we probably can't proclaim him "fixed" just yet. It would be foolish, however, not to buy into this hot start, as there are some signs that a very real breakout could be underway with the improved shape of his changeup and the overall improved command of his full arsenal.

He's got the talent, and there's a lot to like in his profile. I think his ceiling is pretty high, and Milwaukee's reputation with starting pitchers should give us a ton of optimism.

 

Parker Messick, Cleveland Guardians

  • 29% Rostered
  • 2025 Stats: 3 W, 39.2 IP, 2.72 ERA, 1.31 WHIP
  • First Start of 2026: 6 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K

I was a huge Parker Messick fan coming into this season, so I was extremely excited to see him make the opening day rotation. I think Cleveland made the right decision in demoting Logan Allen, who really struggled in the spring, and keeping Messick up with the team. It was clear this spring that Messick was the better pitcher, and that only became even more evident after he went out and shut down one of the best offenses in baseball in his 2026 debut.

Messick has one of the more varied and balanced arsenals of a pitcher who is just 25 years old and entering his first full season in the majors.

He threw seven different pitches in his debut, while not throwing any single pitch more than 30% of the time. What's fascinating is that he is a totally different pitcher in terms of his usage vs. lefties and righties.

Against the Dodgers, he pounded lefties with the sinker and slider 50% of the time, while he attacks righties with his four-seamer, changeup, and cutter.

His fastball is a little below-average in velocity, but he can locate it with impressive accuracy and only needs to do so occasionally to set up his other pitches. We've seen other lefties, like Trevor Rogers, for example, get away with a 92 mph fastball when they have plus secondary pitches.

Messick doesn't profile as a high-strikeout pitcher, and his results against the Dodgers affirm that as he had only a 10.5% SwStr% and a Stuff+ rating of 97. But his ability to sequence his pitches and hit his spots is well beyond his years and bodes well for his run suppression going forward. Hitters simply have a really hard time barreling him up. He allowed only 25% hard contact last year and was at just 20% in this first start.

Verdict: This is the type of result that we can expect from Messick if he continues to pitch as he has in his limited MLB innings so far. He can provide excellent run suppression with only an average amount of strikeouts. I can live with a strikeout rate in the low to mid-20s if we also get really good control to go with it, which could result in solid ratios for fantasy.

Messick's pitching metrics don't jump off the page, but he was really good against a formidable lineup, and I think we can expect to see this level of production going forward. Let's end the article with a breakout call, so, YES, Parker Messick is a 2026 breakout in progress!

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